Jordanscollected’s Hobby Farm
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We feed them grass balancer twice a day and they sure love it. Now they’re looking into the sunrise deciding where to graze next.
New additions coming to the farm later today.
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Some friends of our were rehoming their Cayuga ducks. Of course Allie said she wants them. We have 4 little quackers and we know very little about managing ducks. We will learn on the go.
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@jordanscollected what is grass balancer? Do horses, as herbivores, need it? Wasn’t aware of it. Thanks for any insight.
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@motojobobo it’s a non sweet horse feed in pellet form that provides vitamins and other nutrients to them without promoting weight gain. It’s especially helpful when they are only on hay in the winter because the variety of grass/hay is less than when they are grazing.
We’re in a pretty bad drought in MN so the horses are being pretty selective on what they will eat.
The balancer provides what they are missing.
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They each get 1.5lb per day of this feed
https://www.chewy.com/proelite-grass-advantage-ultra/dp/1097622
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@jordanscollected That begs the question… Do you have matching trousers for the ?
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@tody I don’t now but those new cargos are on my radar. That would be a great way to build a rapport with them.
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Thanks for the info @jordanscollected . I’m guessing we are generally not familiar with those supplements around here as our horses have green pasture available year round and that gives them the ability to fulfill their dietary requirements on their own. Does that sound reasonable to you?
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@motojobobo it does. If we were afforded year round pasture, we wouldn’t need it.
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The audacity of Ash to say my shirt is but “Mock Duck”.
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wait this is insane...a dream come true...do you have horses?
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oh wait i saw above - yeah you do. when are you throwing a USA IH party?
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@cool_breeze_ we would love to host an IH party at the farm. People could camp or rent RV's and park them around the yard.
It is a dream come true for real.
No one calls us to hang out these days anyhow. We might and well fill our free time getting bossed around by the animals, inside and out.
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One thing we lack on the farm is storage for large items like the boat, horse trailer, and most importantly hay. Instead of contracting an outbuilding I took the economical approach and assembled this 12x20 portable garage from Harbor Freight. We should be able to get 80-100 square bales of hay which should be half what we need for the horses this winter. It’ll take some storage “stress” off the barn.
I’m lining the floor with wood pallets and tarps and then we will get our hay, hopefully this coming weekend.
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cool man if you need help and it lines up with my schedule i'd love to lend a hand
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Today has solidified for me that the term “having a hay day” is meant for the horses, not meant for the people throwing bales.
We are getting hay for the winter from the former owners hay supplier. I decided to save a little money per bale and go pick up the hay wagon instead of having it delivered. So for 12 miles I towed these 150 bales at a top speed of 20 mph towards home.
We are storing 80 in the barn and another 120 in the storage I built last weekend. We will go pick up the rest of the hay in the next week or so to be set for most of the winter.
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They are heavy and dense @SKT. They are a mix of grass (mostly Timothy) and alfalfa. They seem like really high quality hay that will yield little waste.
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@jordanscollected I worked on a dairy farm when I was in high school and sometimes have nightmares (not really) about bucking those heavy alfalfa bales. Bet they smell amazing though